GAO Issues Report on Qualified Infectious Disease Products

The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) recently issued a January 2017 report to the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. The GAO report examines:

The steps FDA has taken to encourage the development of antibiotics to treat serious or life-threatening infections since the enactment of title VIII of the Food and Drug Safety and Innovation Act, which is commonly referred to as the Generating Antibiotic Incentives Now (GAIN) provisions; and

Drug sponsors’ perspectives on FDA’s efforts to encourage the development of antibiotics to treat serious or life-threatening infections since the enactment of GAIN.

GAO analyzed FDA data on requests for QIDP designation since the enactment of the GAIN provisions as part of the Food and Drug Administration Safety and Innovation Act (FDASIA) on July 9, 2012 through December 31, 2015. GAO also interviewed ten industry sponsors on FDA’s efforts to encourage the development of antibiotics to treat serious or life-threatening infections since July 9, 2012.

GAO’s report provides a helpful overview of the QIDP program, an accounting of the drugs that have been granted QIDP designation, and findings related to FDA’s antibiotic development guidance documents. GAO also issued two recommendations, discussed below.

GAO Recommendations/FDA Response

Issue

OIG Recommendation

HHS/FDA Response

Antibacterial Draft Guidance

FDA should clarify the role of draft guidance

Draft guidance is not binding and is provided to enable public comment on ideas FDA is considering

Written Guidance on QIDP

FDA should develop written guidance on the QIDP designation to help drug sponsors better understand the designation and its associated incentives

HHS indicated that FDA intends to proceed promptly with developing written guidance on the QIDP designation, the process for requesting fast track designation, and the criteria for determining whether an application qualifies for the 5 additional years of QIDP market exclusivity

Key Findings

Since 2012, FDA has granted 101 of 109 (93%) requests for QIDP designation.

Despite their eligibility, many drug sponsors with QIDP designation have not applied for fast track designation. Of the 101 QIDP-designated products, sponsors submitted only 61 (60%) requests for fast track designation. FDA granted all 61 (100%) of these requests.